What's the cost of living in Los Cabos - La Paz, Mexico?
Paul Clark - East Cape Homes
On a monthly basis, the cost of living in Los Cabos for a middle class family who would normally eat at home and shop at a local store would be $2,000 - $2,500 a month without housing. If you shop at Costco as opposed to the local stores, your cost of living will go up by about 25-30%.
La Paz is less expensive compared to Los Cabos accommodation-wise. The cost of living in La Paz would be about $2,000 a month. Services are less expensive in La Paz than in Los Cabos as...
On a monthly basis, the cost of living in Los Cabos for a middle class family who would normally eat at home and shop at a local store would be $2,000 - $2,500 a month without housing. If you shop at Costco as opposed to the local stores, your cost of living will go up by about 25-30%.
La Paz is less expensive compared to Los Cabos accommodation-wise. The cost of living in La Paz would be about $2,000 a month. Services are less expensive in La Paz than in Los Cabos as well because La Paz is not dominated by tourism, whereas there are a lot of wealthy residential areas in Los Cabos that make the cost of living there higher.
Our cost of living here in Cabo Pulmo is less because my family and I don’t go out as much- we’re more self-contained. That means we would shop in town and put it in the freezer. One of our higher expenses is the cost of transportation because of the rustic roads that cause our vehicles to need repairs more often. Also, gasoline costs $4-5 dollars per gallon.
If you’re living the lifestyle that we do- living right on the beach, fishing, without spending a lot of money in restaurants and other amenities, your cost living would be less than $1,000 without housing costs.
Here in the East Cape area, lots with a view of the ocean would cost $20,000 - $100,000. The cost of construction here in the East Cape area is about $100-$200 a square foot for a basic American home.
You can buy a house on the East Cape for under $200,000 for a 1,500 – 2,000 square foot house. Your only utility expenses will be water, which will cost $50 - $100 a month, and propane for your hot water and cooking at around $50 a month.
You can buy a nice home within the city in La Paz for $150,000. Houses are inexpensive in La Paz because there’s no pressure from tourism. La Paz is a mixture of Mexican and expat communities that is made up of 280,000 people. The expat community in La Paz is small compared to the expat community in San José del Cabo.
In Canada, the cost of living would be twice the cost of living in San José del Cabo. Housing is very expensive in Canada. Housing in Canada can cost around $2,000 a month plus utilities for a small house rental.
(High- end East Cape home, Baja California Sur, Mexico, pictured. )
If I want to live in Belize, do I have to become a permanent resident?
Ryan Wrobel - Wrobel & Co., Attorneys-at-Law
You don’t have to become a permanent resident in Belize if you didn’t want to. What would make the most sense for you would depend on your goals. If, for example, you decide to live here in Belize for the remainder of your life, you would enter with a tourist visa and you have to update that visa on a monthly basis at the immigration department. After you are in Belize legally for one year by updating that tourist visa, then, if you so desire, you can apply for...
You don’t have to become a permanent resident in Belize if you didn’t want to. What would make the most sense for you would depend on your goals. If, for example, you decide to live here in Belize for the remainder of your life, you would enter with a tourist visa and you have to update that visa on a monthly basis at the immigration department. After you are in Belize legally for one year by updating that tourist visa, then, if you so desire, you can apply for residency. Being a permanent resident provides several benefits, including no longer having to update your tourist visa.
(Kayaks on a Caribbean beach in Belize, pictured.)
What are the worst reasons to retire to Nicaragua?
Daniel Snider - Snider's Realty Nicaragua
The worst reason to retire in Nicaragus is if you are a felon in the US trying to escape to here. A couple of the FBI most wanted have been caught here in Nicaragua. They thought Nicaragua was a good place to hide, but lo and behold, they got caught.
Another bad reason to retire in Nicaragua as an expat is to think that you are coming into another state of the United States. Nicaragua is a completely different country and you should be able to assimilate...
The worst reason to retire in Nicaragus is if you are a felon in the US trying to escape to here. A couple of the FBI most wanted have been caught here in Nicaragua. They thought Nicaragua was a good place to hide, but lo and behold, they got caught.
Another bad reason to retire in Nicaragua as an expat is to think that you are coming into another state of the United States. Nicaragua is a completely different country and you should be able to assimilate different aspects of the culture, the people, the food, and everything else that Nicaragua has to offer. It will go very badly for you if you think that you will just come here as an expat and completely ignore the fact that people here have their own language, identity, and culture, and for you not to adapt in some way.
So if you are those two people that I have mentioned above, then do not come to Nicaragua.
Do I need to renounce or relinquish my US citizenship or get a dual citizenship to move or live abroad?
RICH Novak - RE/MAX Beaches & City! INC.
To answer the question directly, it is not necessary for you to relinquish your citizenship or even get a dual citizenship in order to live in Panama. You can be a perpetual tourist, if you follow the rules, or you can get one of the different visas available.
When you come to Panama, you can come as a tourist or a visitor, and stay for 180 days, but then you have to leave the country for 72 hours. Then you can come back again. There are people who are stay in...
To answer the question directly, it is not necessary for you to relinquish your citizenship or even get a dual citizenship in order to live in Panama. You can be a perpetual tourist, if you follow the rules, or you can get one of the different visas available.
When you come to Panama, you can come as a tourist or a visitor, and stay for 180 days, but then you have to leave the country for 72 hours. Then you can come back again. There are people who are stay in Panama indefinitely as perpetual tourists.
By law a Pensionado in Panama does not need a passport and possible Panamanian citizenship, but the government of Panama recently changed that rule, so that now, after a person’s has legally been here for five years, you can apply for citizenship. Nobody that I know has ever become a citizen and received a Panamanian passport that I know of, though, so it is absolutely not necessary in order to stay in Panama.
There are programs like the one they have in Saint Kitts, where you could start with an investment of US $350,000 and receive citizenship. To renounce your citizenship is a gray area. You may want to renounce your citizenship or you may not.
I know a Canadian guy who says that he has done everything to become a citizen of Panama, but the president of Panama needs to approve his application to become a citizen. That is the only thing he is says he needs, and I am waiting to see if that happens.
I am a US citizen and because I am a US citizen living overseas, I have to put up with some crazy laws. Because I am a citizen of the United States, I have to send in a report to Detroit telling the government what money I have in foreign bank accounts, and if I do not tell them, the penalty is 50% per year. So just because you already live in another country, does not relieve you of taxes and some other legal obligations in the US, because you are still a US citizen.
The currency being used by Portugal is the euro. If you have dollars and you are coming for a vacation from the US into Portugal, or if you have pounds from the UK or Swedish krona from Sweden, you could buy euros at your local bank. It is also possible to buy traveler’s checks although I don’t see a lot of people using traveler’s checks these days any more, but they come with a guarantee and protection, so a traveler’s check is a more suitable choice...
The currency being used by Portugal is the euro. If you have dollars and you are coming for a vacation from the US into Portugal, or if you have pounds from the UK or Swedish krona from Sweden, you could buy euros at your local bank. It is also possible to buy traveler’s checks although I don’t see a lot of people using traveler’s checks these days any more, but they come with a guarantee and protection, so a traveler’s check is a more suitable choice especially for the older generation.
You can also simply use your ATM or cash withdrawal cards in most local ATMs in Europe. Your bank will charge you for doing so. You could withdraw euros at the local ATMs in Portugal and then you will get a bill in the US in dollars with the rates stipulated by the banks.
If you are coming to Portugal for a longer period then we recommend that you use a currency broker because currency brokers can transact millions of dollars, pounds, or whatever currency per day. They would be able to get you a better rate and allow you to get “more euro for your buck”.
(Money clip of Portuguese coin before the euro, pictured.)
As with any real estate, prices will mostly be affected by location. In Panama City there are areas which are most wanted because of the proximity with the business area, Balboa Avenue, Punta Pacífica and San Francisco, with prices starting at $1,100 for example.
In the countryside there are also other areas more wanted by expats, such as Coronado and Boquete where you may find rentals starting at $800. Long term rentals can be most...
As with any real estate, prices will mostly be affected by location. In Panama City there are areas which are most wanted because of the proximity with the business area, Balboa Avenue, Punta Pacífica and San Francisco, with prices starting at $1,100 for example.
In the countryside there are also other areas more wanted by expats, such as Coronado and Boquete where you may find rentals starting at $800. Long term rentals can be most convenient for getting better prices.
What happens when you mix two years of shamanic work, 12 peacocks, zero chickens, 42 animals on two acres, five cats, five dogs, two biological children, six adopted children, a 10 day fact finding tour, a move with 10 animals, two teenagers, one best friend from high school and four containers, 10 minutes to be in the jungle (12 without seeing a snake), and five House Hunter’s International, with one caring, remarkable woman? Read on, and find out, as Jet Metier...
From an interview by Jet Metier with Bill Edsell, of Ventana Bay Resort in July, 2016.
Jet: We're speaking with Bill Edsell, owner of Ventana Bay Resort, in a large, palapa-covered room the resort uses as a restaurant. It is very comfortable; you don’t notice how hot it is outside. One side of the room is open to the Sea of Cortez and on the other side, a sliding glass door in the back is only half open. You can’t tell its 95 degrees with moderate...
Curious about how to buy or sell real estate in Panama? This story will cover the basics on buying or selling real estate in Panama, including the costs of buying or selling property and the conveyance process.
In some cases, but not all, the first step in the sales process is a Promise to Purchase agreement, whereby the buyer puts down a good faith deposit to take the property off the market for a certain amount of days. The real...